By bus
Due to its central location, Brasilia is well served by a bus network that connects it with the rest of Brazil. Travel times are about 15 hours to São Paulo, 18 hours to Rio, 10 hours to Belo Horizonte and 3 hours to Goiania. Buses from other States arrive at a dedicated bus station called rodoferroviaria phone:(61 3363-4045), that is located at the west end of the axis and is connected to the city centre by bus number 131, frequency each 10-20 minutes, from 5 am to midnight and taxis.
By plane
Due to long distances and falling prices in air travel, flying has become a practical way of getting to Brasilia. The city is a national air travel hub, and there should be plenty of flights. In fact you may find your plane touching down at Brasilia airport even if you're not starting or ending anywhere near, such as Salvador to Belém. On the other hand, despite being a major international capital, getting in directly from abroad is difficult to impossible in most cases. Virtually all flights are domestic, and you will have to go through Brazilian customs and immigration elsewhere and re-board. Currently, there are only non-stop flights from Lisbon TAP Portugal, Bogotá AviancaTaca (http://www.taca.com), Miami TAM Brazil and American Airlines, Panama City COPA, Montevideo Pluna and Atlanta Delta Airlines.
Presidente Juscelino Kubitschek International Airport IATA: BSB ICAO: SBBR, BrasÃlia's airport phone:(61 3364-9000, fax: 61 3364-9251), is situated 11 km 7 mi from the city center and has one of the few tourist information services in town phone (61 3033.9488, from 7.30 am to 10.30 pm). It also has an exchange office at the arrivals area, another one at Banco do Brasil open Mo-Fri 11:00-16:00, departures area and several ATMs.
There are an Executive Bus from airport to hotel zone and the central region for R$8.
Taxis are annother convenient means of getting from the airport into the city. They are relatively expensive for Brazilian standards and the 20-minute drive to the hotel zone should cost about R$ 30-40. Regular buses number 102 and 102.1 are frequent and significantly cheaper. They link the airport to the main bus terminal at Rodoviária, from where you can catch buses or the subway to other parts of the city.
By car
Drivers coming from southern and Center-west states will arrive by the SaÃda Sul entrance. From other states, you'll enter Brasilia by SaÃda Norte. After you're inside the Federal District, keep following the BrasÃlia indicating traffic signs and Zona Central if you're staying at the hotel sector.The Eixo Rodoviário Road, that crosses the city's south, central, and north sectors, can be identified by the caracteristics double strip of yellow raised pavement markers Cat's eye separating the two lanes of the road.